Very interesting. I've never really thought about fooling with a tea light stove mostly because I didn't figure I'd keep one around long enough to really test it well. However, that little idea may just change my mind on that one.

Jason-Great idea. I recently tried using a tea light stove because I was tired of the guessing factor of my other alchy stoves..how much fuel was in there, etc... and found that just dumping the alcohol in the tea light got water to a rolling boil in 5 minutes. I like your set up. It reduces the crush factor, everything is all in one.

I've come full circle with stoves. I still like Esbit and my Giga power.

Believe it or not...I discovered it by accident. I had been using Tinny's new blackfly stove (before the iso came out)when I went on my 5 day trip along Mt Rogers. I was having some problems of over-heating so he suggested making a blend of equal parts methanol/isopropal. I gotta say, it worked like a charm. BUT....I found I am not a simmer gal and like to get things boiling.

I went to the Catskills the first week of Sept. and camped out a week. I used the alchohol blend in my tealight on a whim. Morning temps were roughly in the upper 40's (I could see my breath and needed a fire)and day temps were mid 70's. The morning took much longer to boil and more fuel. I would say roughly 8 minutes in that low temp. The rest of the time in 5 minutes flat. I used a windscreen and my Esbit stove. Water temp was spring water cold. I have to guess water temps because I didn't have a means to measure it. In the future, the morning temps that cold would leave me to use my Esbit or Giga. I'm not too much of an alchy fan. Too much fiddle factor. But try the blend. It worked great.

I forgot to say...I normally boil 1 1/2 cups water no matter. I can always use leftover for cleaning. I have a Snowpeak solo (not sure the model. It nests 2 bowls and a fry lid) The pot I use holds just under a liter.

Also...as you can see I just wing things...I completely filled the tealight in the morning for a boil. During the day and evening, I filled it but discovered I only used half of the fuel. I believe tealights hold an ounce.

Donna, thanks for your info. Got a question <""Believe it or not...I discovered it by accident. I had been using Tinny's new blackfly stove (before the iso came out)when I went on my 5 day trip along Mt Rogers. I was having some problems of over-heating so he suggested making a blend of equal parts methanol/isopropal. I gotta say, it worked like a charm. BUT....I found I am not a simmer gal and like to get things boiling.""

Was it the ISO that overheated or the Blackfly? The reason I ask is the ISO came out before the Blackfly.

uhhh.....the Blackfly was first. My stove is black. The Iso has those 4 screws with a double wick coming out of them and the pot stand. Mine has just the single looping wick.

http://www.minibulldesign.com/fs2.htm

But...whatever the name, it was the very first wick stove Tinny built. The windscreen was crucial in keeping the temp of the stove cool enough as to not overheat. I finally knew how to work with it. It's a great little stove if you want to slow-cook, which sometimes I enjoy. I did find it difficult to pour the alcohol back without water from the jacket getting in the way. After awhile of using the thing, I knew pretty much how much alchy I needed for certain meals or tea. Like anything else, one gets familiar with their gear and its personality. : )

Also...fuel usage went a very long way. That's one of the great things about his wick stoves. It will boil, and you can set up your campsite while it's heating. I just found that my style of camping turned out not what I thought it would be.

I have had mixed results with the squirt bottles. The bottle needs to be tested. Squeeze on an empty bottle near your ear. If you hear air or the bottle colapses then there is an air leak and the bottle should be rejected.

AntiGravityGear sells alcohol bottles with the squirt tops. Never had a problem.

I have all my bottle mixed in a plastic bag, but it seems that the REI bottles seldom leak but the Coghlans leak often.